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Dive into the research topics where Bernard Citron is active.

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Featured researches published by Bernard Citron.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2001

Comparison of direct coronary stenting with and without balloon predilatation in patients with stable angina pectoris

Didier Carrié; Khalife Khalife; Bernard Citron; Karl Izaaz; Martial Hamon; Jean Michel Juiliard; Florence Leclercq; Joelle Fourcade; Janus Lipiecki; Rémi Sabatier; Vincent Boulet; Jean-Pierre Rinaldi; Sami Mourali; Michel Fatouch; Elyes El Mokhtar; Fethi Aboujaoudé; Meyer Elbaz; Robert Grolleau; Pierre Gabriel Steg; Jacques Puel

The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of stent placement with and without balloon predilatation on duration of the procedure, reduction of procedure-related costs, and clinical outcomes. Although preliminary trials of direct coronary stenting have demonstrated promising results, the lack of randomized studies with long-term follow-up has limited the critical evaluation of the role of direct stenting in the treatment of obstructive coronary artery disease. Between January and September 1999, 338 patients were randomly assigned to either direct stent implantation (DS+; 173 patients) or standard stent implantation with balloon predilatation (DS-; 165 patients). Baseline clinical and angiographic characteristics were similar in the 2 groups. Procedural success was achieved in 98.3% of patients assigned to DS+ and 97.5% of patients assigned to DS- (p = NS), with a crossover rate of 13.9%. Compared with DS-, DS+ conferred a dramatic reduction in procedure-related cost (


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2000

The French Randomized Optimal Stenting Trial: A Prospective Evaluation of Provisional Stenting Guided by Coronary Velocity Reserve and Quantitative Coronary Angiography

Antoine Lafont; Jean Luc Dubois-Rande; Philippe Gabriel Steg; Patrick Dupouy; Didier Carrié; Pierre Coste; Alain Furber; Farzin Beygui; Laurent J. Feldman; Saliha Rahal; Christophe Tron; Martial Hamon; Gilles Grollier; Philippe Commeau; Pascal Richard; Patrice Colin; Christophe Bauters; Gaëtan Karrillon; François Ledru; Bernard Citron; François Noel Marié; Morton J. Kern

956.4 +/-


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases | 2014

A single pathophysiological pathway in Takotsubo cardiomyopathy: Catecholaminergic stress

Elisabeth Coupez; Bruno Pereira; Romain Pierrard; Géraud Souteyrand; Guillaume Clerfond; Bernard Citron; Jean-René Lusson; Nicolas Mansencal; Pascal Motreff

352.2 vs


The Annals of Thoracic Surgery | 2001

Spontaneous intramural left atrial hematoma associated with systemic amyloidosis

Ko Watanabe; Bruno Miguel; Jean Louis Kemeny; Bernard Citron; Lionel Camilleri

1,164.6 +/-


Medicine | 2015

Acute and Chronic Pheochromocytoma-Induced Cardiomyopathies: Different Prognoses?: A Systematic Analytical Review.

Marie Batisse-Lignier; Bruno Pereira; Pascal Motreff; Romain Pierrard; Christelle Burnot; Charles Vorilhon; Salwan Maqdasy; B. Roche; F. Desbiez; Guillaume Clerfond; Bernard Citron; Jean-René Lusson; Igor Tauveron

383.9, p <0.0001) and duration of the procedure (424.2 +/- 412.1 vs 634.5 +/- 390.1 seconds, p < 0.0001). At 6-month follow-up, the incidence of major adverse cardiac events including death, angina pectoris, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, repeat angioplasty, or coronary artery bypass graft surgery was 5.3% in DS+ and 11.4% in DS- (p = NS). Multivariate analysis demonstrated that major adverse cardiac events rates were related to stent length of 10 mm (relative risk [RR] 3.25, 95% confidence intervals [CI] 1.36 to 7.78; p = 0.008), stent diameter of 3 mm (RR 2.69, 95% CI 1.03 to 7.06; p = 0.043), and complex lesion type C (RR 2.83, 95% CI 1.02 to 7.85; p = 0.045). Thus, in selected patients, this prospective randomized study shows the feasibility of DS+ with reduction in procedural cost and length, and without an increase in in-hospital clinical events and major adverse cardiac events at 6-month follow-up.


Respiratory Physiology & Neurobiology | 2011

Pulmonary arterial systolic pressure and susceptibility to high altitude pulmonary edema.

Rémi Mounier; Aimé Amonchot; Nicolas Caillot; Cécile Gladine; Bernard Citron; Mario Bedu; Erica N. Chirico; Jean Coudert; Vincent Pialoux

OBJECTIVES We sought to make a prospective comparison of systematic stenting with provisional stenting guided by Doppler measurements of coronary velocity reserve and quantitative coronary angiography. BACKGROUND Despite the increasing use of stents during percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, it is unclear whether systematic stenting is superior to a strategy of provisional stenting in which stents are placed only in patients with unsatisfactory results or as a bail-out procedure. METHODS Two hundred fifty-one patients undergoing elective coronary angioplasty were randomly assigned either to provisional stenting (group 1, in which stenting was performed if postangioplasty coronary velocity reserve was <2.2 and/or residual stenosis > or =35% or as bail-out) or to systematic stenting (group 2). The primary end point was the six-month angiographic minimal lumen diameter (MLD). Major adverse cardiac events were secondary end points (death, acute myocardial infarction and target lesion revascularization). RESULTS Stenting was performed in 48.4% of patients in group 1 and 100% of patients in group 2 (p<0.01). Six months after angioplasty, the MLD did not differ between groups (1.90+/-0.79 mm vs. 1.99+/-0.70 mm, p = 0.39), as was the rate of binary restenosis (27.1% vs. 21.4%, p = 0.37). Among patients with restenosis, 13/32 (40.6%) in group 1 but 100% (25/25) in group 2 had in-stent restenosis (p<0.01). Target lesion revascularization (15.1% vs. 14.4% in groups 1 and 2 respectively, p = 0.89) and major adverse cardiac events (15.1% vs. 16.0%, p = 0.85) were not significantly different. CONCLUSIONS Systematic stenting does not provide superior angiographic results at six months as compared with provisional stenting.


American Journal of Cardiology | 2016

Amiodarone-Induced Thyrotoxicosis Recurrence After Amiodarone Reintroduction.

S. Maqdasy; Marie Batisse-Lignier; Candy Auclair; F. Desbiez; Bernard Citron; P. Thieblot; B. Roche; Jean René Lusson; I. Tauveron

BACKGROUND Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TTC) continues to be under-diagnosed, due to its varying presentation, with potentially serious consequences if treatment is delayed. AIMS To demonstrate the consistent involvement of catecholaminergic stress in TTC, regardless of the trigger. METHODS Between 01 July 2009 and 31 August 2013, patients managed in our centre for thoracic pain syndrome, with or without troponin release, were followed up prospectively. TTC was diagnosed from the apical ballooning seen on left ventricular imaging (angiography or transthoracic echocardiography) in the absence of a significant coronary artery lesion. Triggers (emotional trauma, surgical stress and β2-mimetic intoxication) were recorded; catecholamine-secreting tumours were screened for with a urinary methoxylate-derivative assay. RESULTS TTC was diagnosed in 40 out of 2754 (1.5%) patients with thoracic pain syndrome, with or without troponin release. Triggers were emotional trauma (n=29, 72.5%), surgical stress (n=5, 12.5%), adrenergic intoxication (n=3, 7.5%) and catecholaminergic tumour (n=3, 7.5%). Mean left ventricular ejection fraction at admission was 38.0 ± 15.7%. Eight (20%) patients initially showed cardiogenic shock. In-hospital mortality was 7.5%, with no deaths from cardiogenic causes. Thirty-five (94.6%) of the survivors had recovered a normal left ventricular ejection fraction (> 55%) by discharge. CONCLUSION Whatever the trigger, the common denominator in TTC is catecholaminergic stress. Classically suggested after emotional trauma, TTC may also be induced by surgical stress or endogenous or iatrogenic β2-mimetic intoxication. The various contexts all have a similarly excellent cardiovascular prognosis if treated early.


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases | 2010

High-resolution coronary imaging by optical coherence tomography: Feasibility, pitfalls and artefact analysis.

Pascal Motreff; Sébastien Levesque; Geraud Souteyrand; Laurent Sarry; Lemlih Ouchchane; Bernard Citron; Jean Cassagnes; Jean-René Lusson

Spontaneous intramural left atrial hematoma is very rare. We describe a case of spontaneous intramural left atrial hematoma that had to be semiurgently resected. Postoperatively, the patient was diagnosed as having systemic immunocyte-derived (AL) amyloidosis, because of rare manifestations of fatal bleeding. Though spontaneous intramural left atrial hematoma is one of the severe complications of systemic AL amyloidosis, we believe that amyloid deposits caused fragility of the left atrial wall.


American Heart Journal | 1993

Reinjection as an alternative to rest imaging for detection of exercise-induced ischemia with thallium-201 emission tomography

Jean Maublant; Janusz Lipiecki; Bernard Citron; Bernard Karsenty; Danièle Mestas; Jean-Yves Boire; Annie Veyre; Jean Ponsonnaille

AbstractPheochromocytoma and paraganglioma (PPG) are rare and late-diagnosed catecholamine secreting tumors, which may be associated with unrecognized and/or severe cardiomyopathies.We performed a computer-assisted systematic search of the electronic Medline databases using the MESH terms “myocarditis,” “myocardial infarction,” “Takotsubo,” “stress cardiomyopathy,” “cardiogenic shock”, or “dilated cardiomyopathy,” and “pheochromocytoma” or “paraganglioma” from 1961 to August 2012. All detailed case reports of cardiomyopathy due to a PPG, without coronary stenosis, and revealed by acute symptoms were included and analyzed.A total of 145 cases reports were collected (49 Takotsubo Cardiomyopathies [TTC] and 96 other Catecholamine Cardiomyopathies [CC]). At initial presentation, prevalence of high blood pressure (87.7%), chest pain (49.0%), headaches (47.6%), palpitations (46.9%), sweating (39.3%), and shock (51.0%) were comparable between CC and TTC. Acute pulmonary edema (58.3% vs 38.8%, P = 0.03) was more frequent in CC. There was no difference in proportion of patients with severe left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LV Ejection Fraction [LVEF] < 30%) at initial presentation between both groups (P = 0.15). LVEF recovery before (64.9% vs 40.8%, P = 0.005) and after surgical resection (97.7% vs73.3%, P = 0.001) was higher in the TTC group. Death occurred in 11 cases (7.6%). In multivariate analysis, only TTC was associated with a better LV recovery (0.15 [0.03–0.67], P = 0.03).Pheochromocytoma and paraganglioma can lead to different cardiomyopathies with the same brutal and life-threatening initial clinical presentation but with a different recovery rate. Diagnosis of unexplained dilated cardiomyopathy or TTC should lead clinicians to a specific search for PPG.


Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases Supplements | 2015

0369: Heart failure octogenarians are poorly managed and treated: a cohort study in the French national healthcare insurance database

Charles Vorilhon; Chouki Chenaf; Aurélien Mulliez; Bruno Pereira; Guillaume Clerfond; Nicolas Authier; Frédéric Jean; Pascal Motreff; Bernard Citron; Alain Eschalier; Jean René Lusson

There is evidence that pulmonary arterial hypertension plays a major role in the occurrence of high altitude pulmonary edema (HAPE). We tested the hypothesis that the pulmonary arterial systolic pressure response to a challenge associated with hypoxia and mild exercise may be considered a predictive factor of HAPE. Pulmonary arterial systolic pressure was measured by Doppler echocardiography in 8 HAPE susceptible (HAPE-S) subjects and 8 HAPE resistant mountaineers (HAPE-R) during a hypoxic exercise challenge established by the French Association for Sport Medicine (Richalets test). Pulmonary arterial systolic pressure during hypoxic exercise allowed a significant discrimination between the groups, although an overlap of values was observed. When expressed as individual variations from baseline to hypoxic exercise level however, we found a highly significant difference. No overlap was observed between HAPE-R (range: 6.7-18.5 mmHg) and HAPE-S (range: 19.2-30.4 mmHg) groups, with a cut-off value at 19 mmHg. Plasma Vascular Endothelial growth factor (VEGF) and malondialdehyde (MDA) increased in response to hypoxic exercise only in HAPE-S group. Individual increases in pulmonary arterial systolic pressure during hypoxic exercise from basal resting normoxic values seem relevant to estimate HAPE susceptibility when measured during the Richalets test.

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Pascal Motreff

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Géraud Souteyrand

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guillaume Clerfond

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Bruno Pereira

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Jean-René Lusson

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Frédéric Jean

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Aurélien Mulliez

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Nicolas Combaret

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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